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“Scaling” the Impact of EDA Education

“Scaling” the Impact of EDA Education. Preliminary Findings from the CCC Workshop Series on Extreme Scale Design Automation I. Bahar , A. Jones, S. Katkoori , P. Madden, D. Marculescu , and I. Markov < esda website> akjones@pitt.edu. Introduction.

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“Scaling” the Impact of EDA Education

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  1. “Scaling” the Impact of EDA Education Preliminary Findings from the CCC Workshop Series on Extreme Scale Design Automation I. Bahar, A. Jones, S. Katkoori, P. Madden, D. Marculescu, and I. Markov <esda website> akjones@pitt.edu

  2. Introduction • We have reached the end of Dennard Scaling. • Road mapping efforts continue to focus primarily on Silicon • Significant effort is now placed in “emerging” technologies • Replacement Fabrication Technologies • Niche Technologies to Augment Silicon • Are some a “wild-goose chase?” • Can an emerging technology really take off? • Should the comparison point be the best we can do with silicon? • What is the state of the workforce and education pipeline?

  3. Three EDA Important “Variables” • Technology • Heavily invested in Si • What happens if we must rely on a new or hybrid technology? • Market • Desktops are dinosaurs • Tablets/smartphones • Bio/implantable, sensor networks, etc. • Education • Is what we’re teaching relevant? • EDA is “too hard” • Where are our graduates actually going?

  4. Technical Problems in EDA • Can EDA truly harness the capabilities in conventional technologies of this generation? • Or even last generation, or several generations ago? • Increasing scale of devices in a chip continues to raise the bar • Verification remains a consistently challenging and unsolved problem • Already problematic, power and thermal effects are being further exacerbated • Resiliency is a new problem • We are already under achieving!

  5. Tomorrow’s Design Automation Must • Efficiently harness systems integrating 1015 devices • Effectively model emerging technologies • Provide trustworthy validation of industry strength systems • Address current and emerging design metrics • Extend design tools beyond ICs to entire systems • Model interaction with users and the environment

  6. The Risks of Not Acting are Great • If Dennard Scaling for silicon is truly over… • A new technology would require a major refresh to replace silicon-based semiconductors • What if there is nothing else? • In 10 years we could be faced with reinventing EDA tool chains for an entirely different technology with radically different impacts for: • Power • Cost • Performance • Environmental Impacts • Will we have the workforce available to accomplish this?

  7. Who will lead the revolution? GSA Global, 2011

  8. CCC Workshops on Extreme Scale Design Automation • Series of three workshops • Workshop 1: Emerging Technologies and Workforce Continuity • March 7-8, 2013 Pittsburgh • Workshop 2: Extreme Scale Chips and Industry Research • June 2-3, 2013 Austin (Collocated with DAC) • Workshop 3: Achieving Sustainable Collaborations Through Abstractions, Collaborations, and Benchmarks • November TBA, 2013 San Jose (Collocated with ICCAD)

  9. Overarching Questions • What are the most critical directions for EDA research in support of extreme scale designs? • What are potential new application domains for EDA? Should EDA refocus on full systems? • To what extent should the EDA research agenda and funding be driven by industry? • What are the best practices for collaboration between industry and academia? • What are the educational priorities for EDA?

  10. Outline • Introduction/Motivation • Background • Workshop Findings • Curriculum • Strategies • Building a Pipeline • Conclusions • Early feedback from Workshop 2

  11. Trends EDA Market • US semi. market share 20% • 30% in 1984 • Asia (excluding Japan) 50% • 5% in 1984 • EDA Sector worth $6.4 Bil • IP is about $1.6 Bil • EDA growing 1.5% annually • IP growing 12% annually

  12. Workforce Trends • Consistent with Market Trends • Domestic EDA workforce aging at a rate between 0.8-0.9 years annually. • EDA vendors do not hire dramatically domestically • Rather EDA continues to rely on outsourcing • Outsourced jobs are reported as fairly ineffective. • Disconnect between workforce and education pipeline • Students are less attracted to EDA • Attracted to positions of high social appear (e.g., Google, Facebook) • EDA companies require more sophisticated technical background and pay less!

  13. Outline • Introduction/Motivation • Background • Workshop Findings • Curriculum • Strategies • Building a Pipeline • Conclusions • Early feedback from Workshop 2

  14. Barriers EDA? But I want to save the planet! EDA? But I want to do something cool! • Students want to impact society • EDA is not perceived to “change the world” • EDA is TWO levels of indirection away from “cool” “What do you mean, build the tools to make the chips that enable the smartphone?” EDA? That’s too hard! I have to learn physics and algorithms and stuff!

  15. Disconnect between Workforce and Education

  16. EDA for Conventional CMOS • What are the most important challenges for conventional CMOS? • How does this change in at the “extreme” scale • When will Dennard Scaling fail to continue in CMOS? • Will it fail? • What level of investment is necessary to face these challenges? • Who should make this investment? • What happens if fabrication advances halt altogether?

  17. Expanding Into New Markets • What are potential new application domains for EDA? • EDA for Portable and Wireless Electronics? • Wearable systems, sensors, software defined radio • EDA for Biomedical Systems and Studies • Implantable devices, bio-chips, continuous monitoring, brain-computer interfaces, reverse engineering bio-systems • EDA for Energy Generation and Distribution • Hybrid power sources, smart grid • Others?

  18. Role of Education in EDA • Sagging interest by students in EDA • Problems are considered too difficult • Research problems in academia are considered toys by industry • Other careers are more flashy (e.g., Google/Facebook/Bio) • Industry feedback is a shortage of qualified professionals • Particularly true among fresh graduates • Feeling the academia cannot teach what they actually need to know on the job. • Solutions?

  19. Impressions on state of workforce • Anyone with talent is drawn to other areas • EDA topics are not well presented in the media, not exciting • EDA is saturated/matured, exponential growth is over • EDA is dying, fault of EDA companies, claim to have all the solutions, cut off resources, don’t invest in academic research and close off the pipeline • EDA needs experts beyond tool-flows, cross disciplinary • The problems in EDA are too hard to be attractive over flashy products

  20. Obstacles to EDA market share and attracting top candidates • EDA insinuating into too many new areas without being called EDA • More research to generate excitement not profit • Short sighted investments from industry/government groups • Few open solvable problems and non-competitive salaries • A better business model to fund advanced development • The perception that EDA is a solved field

  21. EDA too broad/demanding for effective education? • Too Broad? • EDA has always been broad, we cannot work in silos • Not too broad, should engage machine learning • Not too broad for education, too broad for training • Breadth is not new, not the problem, problem is the indirection (must see IC design before EDA challenges) • Yes, requires a lot of background, but also true in many technical areas • Too Demanding? • No look at physics • Yes, toy problems are not sufficient for real EDA education anymore • Yes, given there is no real research funding for EDA

  22. What skills are missing? • High-quality software engineering skills • Good programmers • Familiarity with state of the art technology (proprietary/ITAR) • Understanding practical challenges and constraints • Ability to design algorithms that are effective for industry grade problem sizes

  23. Perceived maturity unattractive for startups, no out-of-box thinking? • 50% of responses basically answered “yes” • Limited size of EDA industry (i.e., market share) • Problems too difficult to find niche • Business model less attractive, no end game, deters out-of-box thinking • Can still be an attractive market for a point tool

  24. Expand into non-traditional markets? Do they require design automation? • We should, but we are not the only field with this talent • Yes, into software engineering, we have been verification than SW verification • Define EDA without the E, to show its open to new applications • Areas mentioned: • Finance, biochemical systems, bio-engineering, synthetic bio, data-mining, embedded systems, quantum computation

  25. Value of Emerging Technologies • Will a new technology eventually supplant silicon? • What technologies are worth investing in? • Is a hybrid solution more likely? • What technologies are fundamentally flawed? • What are the realistic upsides of emerging technologies? • Who should make the investment to advance these technologies to “commercial ready” state?

  26. Challenges in EDA

  27. Challenges in EDA • Interplay between resiliency and power is important • Intertwined, cannot treat distinctly • Transistors become unreliable, should be addressed in EDA Flow • If it doesn’t work, it doesn’t matter how energy efficient (validation, resilience?) • Margin and variation identified as key issues. • Cost versus performance tradeoff becoming important

  28. Technology Trends

  29. Technology Trends Other: “Stuff still in labs” Other: Superconducting Electronics

  30. Brayton-Cong 2009 NSF Workshop • July 2009 NSF workshop on EDA findings published in two part IEEE D&T series • US is falling behind Taiwan and Europe in EDA funding. • Taiwan is investing in DA at 1.5-2X higher rate than the US compared with a GDP of 2.7% of the US. • Fundamental EDA concepts often require investment over time to become transformative • Verification and model checking, Non-linear model order reduction • Synthesis for emerging objectives: noise, thermal, variability, reliability, etc. • Programming Languages • Mixed-signal

  31. Brayton-Cong 2009 NSF Workshop • Key New EDA Challenges • Scalable Design Methodologies • Predictable design flows • Intuitive, simplified, and standardized design environments/interfaces • Appropriate abstractions • Scalable synthesis and verification • Post-CMOS/emerging technologies • Uncertainty/Robustness • New classes of algorithms and security

  32. Brayton-Cong 2009 NSF Workshop • Emerging areas for EDA (new markets) • Biology: System bio, synthetic bio • Cyber-physical systems • Datacenter design • Software systems, etc. • Theory and EDA • Cache-aware and CMP-parallel algorithms • Robustness in design • Statistical design • Theoretical analysis of EDA algorithms/benchmarks

  33. Brayton-Cong 2009 NSF Workshop Education • Challenges: • EDA internships are limited • Reduced VC funds • Faculty positions are tight • Student interest has decreased • Industrial EDA research is declining • Commercialization of academic research is more difficult • Positive factors: • EDA will not disappear • Cooperation between industry and academia is high • Technology trends make EDA problems harder • EDA engineers are well paid compared to other engineers • EDA principals valuable in other fields • EDA continues within “hot areas” • System-level, DFM, robustness, many-core, etc.

  34. Brayton-Cong 2009 NSF Workshop Recommendations to NSF: Increase funding by 2.5X • Research • Large-scale efforts that couple design with EDA • Joint research with academia, industry, and system vendors • DA for emerging areas • Interdisciplinary DA + theory and/or mathematics • Education • Developing of senior-level EDA courses • Shared courseware infrastructure for EDA • Increased Post-Doc programs for EDA • Academic/Industry Collaboration • Faculty/summer students at EDA and/or IP design houses • Programs to help faculty spin-off startups and get married to existing startups

  35. Workshop Agenda • Two halves • First: Technologies and New Markets • Second: Education and Workforce • 11:00-12:30, Short talks on Technologies and Markets • Should EDA expand into new markets and if so what markets are appropriate? • Can we make these new markets part of the "core of EDA," and not simply have our community "leave" for greener pastures? • Followed by break-out discussions (over lunch) to discuss and write-up findings

  36. Workshop Agenda 2 • 4:30-5:30, Short talks on Education and Workforce • Is there a shortage of EDA professionals and if so, what should be done? • Is the US competitive in this area in light of outsourcing and recent investments in Europe and Asia? • Is EDA too difficult to effectively educate new professionals? • How can EDA compete with more glamorous careers (e.g., social media, other markets)? • Followed by break-out discussions Friday morning to discuss and write-up findings

  37. A Day in the Life of a 7nm Chip Architect Keynote Address Bob Colwell Deputy Director, MTO DARPA

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